The Media Project is a network of mainstream journalists who are Christians pursuing accurate and intellectually honest reporting on all aspects of culture, particularly the role of religion in public life in all corners of the world. It welcomes friends from other faiths to such discussions and training.

Dec 9

Dec 9 The Future of Narnia

Soon
after the smashing opening weekend of The Chronicles of Narnia: The
Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the Rev. Bob Beltz had a vision of
what his Hollywood colleagues might be doing someday just before his
funeral.

“They could end up holding the first screening of The Last Battle
just before my funeral service. That’s about how long it may take us to
do the whole series,” quipped the 55-year-old Presbyterian pastor,
referring to the seventh and final Narnia novel by the Christian
apologist C.S. Lewis.

Pre-production work has begun on The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince
Caspian and its creators are shooting for a pre-Christmas 2007 release.

Using a best-case scenario, it would take two years to make each
movie, said Beltz, director of special media projects for the
billionaire media entrepreneur Philip Anschutz. That would mean 12 more
years and the last film would appear in 2017. But what if there are
snags?

“Seriously, when we started seeing those first really big numbers
roll in at the box office, that’s when it hit me,” said Beltz. “Some of
us worked on this first movie for a very long time and now it seems
like we may literally get to work on the Chronicles for the rest of our
lives.”

Of course, Anschutz and his Walden Media associates were convinced
that the Narnia novels — with 100 million copies sold over the past 55
years — could turn into the kind of family-friendly franchise that
makes Hollywood insiders see visions of “Star Wars,” “Lord of the
Rings” and "Harry Potter." That’s why Walt Disney Studios helped pour
$180 million into creating “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.”

Within days of the movie’s release, Beltz and other members of
Narnia team knew that they had a green light. At the beginning of this
week (Feb.28), the global box office for first Narnia movie was nearing
$664 million. And for fantasy fans that are keeping score, “The Lion,
the Witch and the Wardrobe” has rung up $288,193,914 at the U.S. box
office since its Dec. 9 release, while “Harry Potter and the Goblet of
Fire,” which came out three weeks earlier, is a nose ahead at
$288,733,970.

Director Adam Adamson of New Zealand will return for the next film,
along with the young quartet of British actors at the heart of the
first film — Georgie Henley, 10, Skandar Keynes, 14, Anna Popplewell,
17, and William Moseley, 18. In “Prince Caspian,” the four heroes
return to the land of Narnia soon after their first adventure, only to
discover that centuries have passed in Narnian time. With the help of
the great lion Aslan, the Christ figure in the series, the children
fight to bring the young Prince Caspian, the rightful heir, to the
throne of Narnia.

The clock is already ticking. With the interconnecting plots, the
actors playing the Pevensie siblings cannot look radically different
even though they will be two to three years older than they were while
filming “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.” To further complicate
matters, the two youngest children — the characters Lucy and Edmund —
are featured in the next novel, “The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.”

The key to the whole project is the response of the millions of
readers who have shared the novels with their children for decades,
said Douglas Gresham, the 61-year-old stepson of Lewis and co-producer
of the first film. He stressed that he will work on the Narnia movies
as long as he is able to do so.

As important as the movies are, he said, the ultimate goal is to
faithfully deliver the author’s stories, symbols and themes. The books
must have the last word.

“The challenge for us as filmmakers, and I have had to become one,
is that everyone who has ever read the Chronicles of Narnia … has a
firmly cast picture, a precise visualization, in their mind of what
Narnia looks like, what the creatures look like, how they should behave
and how they should seem,” said Gresham.

“We must produce films in which we equal or exceed every single one
of those visual imageries. If we do that, then I believe that readers
who love the books will keep going to theaters and we’ll be able to
complete the series.”